The South in the North: Raciolinguistic Perspectives on Family Language Policy in Sweden
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Date
2025-08-25
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Abstract
The thesis examines the FLP-making practices and multilingual familial experiences of
some Southern migrant families in Sweden. Specifically, the thesis investigates (1) children’s
voices and perspectives on their multilingual repertoire and multilingual familial experiences;
(2) how family members experience the interplay between the majority and minority
languages in their daily familial interactions, and (3) how individual FLP decisions
and practices interact with the broader language-related discourses and ideologies in the
majority society. The thesis employs multipronged methodological approaches, including
language portrait methods of body mapping, space-mapping, post-mapping narration,
semi-structured interviews, participant observation, and media text analysis. The thesis
is based on three articles, and the analysis draws on a multi-layered framework, which
brings notions and approaches from different analytical traditions, such as child agency,
language ideology, raciolinguistic ideologies and raciolinguistic perspectives, and critical
discourse analysis, into productive dialogue. The results indicate that FLP experiences
are filled with ambivalence and language choice dilemmas, influenced by both family-internal
factors (such as family constellation, language proficiency asymmetry, competing
linguistic demands and interests, and child agency), and also by family-external factors,
namely racialized perceptions of languages and standard language ideology that appear
to be internalized and enacted by family members, which affect their FLP decisions and
language use practices. Overall, the results reveal that the process of language socialization
in minority languages is not merely a matter of a private FLP decision that can be practiced
based on individual dispositions and beliefs; rather, it appears to be shaped, in part,
by prevailing language ideologies and identity-related discourses in society. This could be
because communicative practice in a minority language is not only a means of fostering
identity expression and continuity in the heritage language and culture, but also a linguistic
practice contributing to the social positioning of otherness. Ultimately, the theoretical
argument of the thesis is that understanding the FLP experience of Southern families in
the Global North needs critical and social justice lenses since they are situated in a context
where their racial and linguistic identities come into play against the monoracial culture
of a monoglossic standard.
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Keywords
Family language policy, family multilingualism, language portrait, raciolinguistic perspectives, migrants, children, the South in the North, Sweden